Synopsis
Lock the doors! Pack your bags! Run for your life! Sneaky Cousin John only acts like a bully when adults aren t around, so Mom doesn t know it s a battle of wills every visit. Ben and his kitty are on the verge of fleeing . . . when inspiration strikes. Suddenly, he and his loyal kitty have reason to think that this visit will be fun, even if it s not the way Mom imagines.
Enriched by the sly details in the comic-book-style illustrations, this mischievous story recognizes that sometimes a kid has to fend for himself. It s an amusing twist on the tale of David vs. Goliath sure to empower the little guy!
Author Biography: Elise Broach lives in Easton, Connecticut.
Nate Lilly lives in Portland, Oregon.
Publishers Weekly
When Mom announces Cousin John is coming for a visit, the story's protagonists a boy and his cat experience a series of flashbacks and premonitions straight out of Grand Guignol. Unbeknownst to Mom, Cousin John is a bully par excellence. So while she's talking up the visit (hers is the only voice heard in the book) with bubbly exhortations such as, "for the whole weekend, we'll do just what you boys want to do," the heroes recall with horror the time John dangled them over an alligator pond, and gird themselves for upcoming games of pretend pirate play in which John will force them to walk the plank into a pit of porcupines and barbed wire. All seems lost until Mom reveals Cousin John's Achilles heel, which inspires the heroes to hatch plans of sweet revenge. The premise of clueless-adult-meets-evil-spawn-relative begins to wear thin about midway through the book. Readers may find themselves growing a bit numb to Cousin John's crimes, even when the visual litany is broken up with a few scenes of the underdogs triumphing. But readers will likely be won over by the hip, edgy and slightly sinister rendering style of debuting illustrator Lilly. His button-eye, expressive characters and humorous attention to detail recall classic comic-strip characters. Broach's (Wet Dog!) chirpy, keenly observed text acts as an effective comic foil to her collaborator's vision of an all-in-the-family near-apocalypse. Ages 4-up. (July) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.